Human Cheek Cells Under Microscope

Materials: ★★☆ Available in most school laboratories or specialist stores
Difficulty: ★☆☆ Can be easily done by most teenagers
Safety: ★★☆ Some safety precautions required to perform safely

Categories: Cells and Microscopes

Alternative titles: Cheek Cell Microscope Slide

Summary

Students collect a sample of their own cheek cells, prepare a wet mount slide, stain the cells with methylene blue or iodine, and observe cell structures such as the nucleus, membrane, and cytoplasm under a microscope.

Procedure

  1. Use a clean toothpick to gently scrape the inside lining of your cheek.
  2. Place a small drop of water on the center of a microscope slide.
  3. Roll and tap the toothpick onto the water drop so cheek cells transfer to the slide.
  4. Place a cover slip carefully over the sample.
  5. View the slide under scanning, low, and high power magnification.
  6. To stain, add a drop of methylene blue or iodine to the edge of the cover slip and draw it across with a paper towel on the opposite side.
  7. Observe the stained cells at different magnifications, focusing on the cell membrane, nucleus, and cytoplasm.

How to Make a Wet Mount of Human Cheek Cells - Carolina Science:


Cheek Cells Under The Microscope - Sci- Inspi:


📄 Human Cheek Cell Station - chess.cornell.edu: https://www.chess.cornell.edu/sites/default/files/inline-files/Human-Cheek-Cell-Station.pdf

Variations

Safety Precautions

Questions to Consider